Description

Book Synopsis
John Shaw Neilson (1872-1942) is Australia's great lyric poet and Collected Poems (1934), dedicated to Louise Dyer, bears his imprimatur. Encouraged by his editor, Robert Croll, Neilson was totally involved in its publication and promotion, selecting the poems, rewriting lines, adding new stanzas and restoring A.G. Stephen's earlier changes. Photographic sittings and book signings followed as well as favourable reviews. Neilson modestly attended readings in his honour at the Bookshop of Margareta Webber and enjoyed the concert broadcasts of Margaret Sutherland's compositions, which included âThe Orange Tree'. After reading the Collected Poems she wrote to Neilson: "I have set your voice to music." A new introduction by Dr Helen Hewson, an honorary associate in the School of Letters, Art and Media at the University of Sydney, explores some of the influences that have shaped Neilson's poetry â his Celtic background, religious upbringing, reading and writing, and love of art and music.

Trade Review
'The collection would make an excellent addition to any English faculty book room, offering scope for a range of thematic studies centring on the Australian experience in the early twentieth century. Neilson's poems are accessible to younger students and could be a valuable tool for teaching poetic form in a conceptual study of people and landscape, distinctive voices and discovery' -- Rebecca Ross, mETAphor

Table of Contents
John Shaw Neilson: songs of love and loss by Helen Hewson
Introduction by R.H. Croll 1. Heart of spring!
2. Green singer
3. Song be delicate
4. Petticoat green
5. Greeting
6. The land where I was born
7. The sun is up
8. Pale neighbour
9. To a blue flower
10. Old Nell Dickerson
11. Along a river
12. Julie Callaway
13. At a lowan's nest
14. Old Granny Sullivan
15. May
16. Maggie Tulliver
17. Break of day
18. Sheedy was dying
19. The eyes of little Charlotte
20. Meeting of sighs
21. Old violin
22. Love's coming
23. The lover sings
24. The girl with the black hair
25. 'Twas in the early summer time
26. As far as my heart can go
27. Her eyes
28. The hour is lost
29. Surely god was a lover
30. You, and yellow air
31. Dear little cottage
32. Roses three
33. The sacrifice
34. Little white girl
35. In the street
36. Child of tears
37. The petticoat plays
38. The loving tree
39. Inland born
40. The child we lost
41. Under a kurrajong
42. The luckless bard to the flying blossom
43. From a coffin
44. All the world's a lolly-shop
45. It is the last
46. The white flowers came
47. The wedding in September
48. The hour of the parting
49. The song and the bird
50. The scent o' the lover
51. At the end of spring
52. For a child
53. The dream is deep
54. The quarrel with the neighbour
55. His love was burned away
56. For a little girl's birthday
57. When kisses are as strawberries
58. Schoolgirls hastening
59. Dolly's offering
60. To a schoolgirl
61. 'Tis the white plum tree
62. The unlovely player
63. The eleventh moon
64. The evening is the morning
65. The orange tree
66. In the dim counties
67. Show me the song
68. The woman of Ireland
69. Ride him away
70. The magpie in the moonlight
71. The birds go by
72. The sweetening of the year
73. Out to the green fields
74. Green lover
75. Stony town
76. To an early-flowering almond
78. Those shaded eyes
79. The blue wren in the hop-bush
80. April weather
81. The Irish welcome
82. Colour yourself for a man
83. The hen in the bushes
84. The moon was seven days down
85. The flight of the weary
86. Love in absence
87. The child being there
88. He sold himself to the daisies
89. So sweet a mouth had she
90. Lament for early buttercups
91. Half a life back
92. The lad who started out
93. To a lodging-house canary
94. Native companions dancing
95. Stephen Foster
96. The stolen lament
97. The Whistling Jack
98. The good season
99. The soldier is home
100. The poor, poor country
101. The winter sundown
102. The bard and the lizard
103. Song for a honeymoon
104. The ballad of remembrance
105. The gentle water bird

Collected Poems of John Shaw Neilson

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    £999.99

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    A Paperback / softback by John Shaw Neilson, Helen Hewson

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      Publisher: Sydney University Press
      Publication Date: 01/10/2013
      ISBN13: 9781743320334, 978-1743320334
      ISBN10: 1743320337
      Also in:
      Poetry

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      John Shaw Neilson (1872-1942) is Australia's great lyric poet and Collected Poems (1934), dedicated to Louise Dyer, bears his imprimatur. Encouraged by his editor, Robert Croll, Neilson was totally involved in its publication and promotion, selecting the poems, rewriting lines, adding new stanzas and restoring A.G. Stephen's earlier changes. Photographic sittings and book signings followed as well as favourable reviews. Neilson modestly attended readings in his honour at the Bookshop of Margareta Webber and enjoyed the concert broadcasts of Margaret Sutherland's compositions, which included âThe Orange Tree'. After reading the Collected Poems she wrote to Neilson: "I have set your voice to music." A new introduction by Dr Helen Hewson, an honorary associate in the School of Letters, Art and Media at the University of Sydney, explores some of the influences that have shaped Neilson's poetry â his Celtic background, religious upbringing, reading and writing, and love of art and music.

      Trade Review
      'The collection would make an excellent addition to any English faculty book room, offering scope for a range of thematic studies centring on the Australian experience in the early twentieth century. Neilson's poems are accessible to younger students and could be a valuable tool for teaching poetic form in a conceptual study of people and landscape, distinctive voices and discovery' -- Rebecca Ross, mETAphor

      Table of Contents
      John Shaw Neilson: songs of love and loss by Helen Hewson
      Introduction by R.H. Croll 1. Heart of spring!
      2. Green singer
      3. Song be delicate
      4. Petticoat green
      5. Greeting
      6. The land where I was born
      7. The sun is up
      8. Pale neighbour
      9. To a blue flower
      10. Old Nell Dickerson
      11. Along a river
      12. Julie Callaway
      13. At a lowan's nest
      14. Old Granny Sullivan
      15. May
      16. Maggie Tulliver
      17. Break of day
      18. Sheedy was dying
      19. The eyes of little Charlotte
      20. Meeting of sighs
      21. Old violin
      22. Love's coming
      23. The lover sings
      24. The girl with the black hair
      25. 'Twas in the early summer time
      26. As far as my heart can go
      27. Her eyes
      28. The hour is lost
      29. Surely god was a lover
      30. You, and yellow air
      31. Dear little cottage
      32. Roses three
      33. The sacrifice
      34. Little white girl
      35. In the street
      36. Child of tears
      37. The petticoat plays
      38. The loving tree
      39. Inland born
      40. The child we lost
      41. Under a kurrajong
      42. The luckless bard to the flying blossom
      43. From a coffin
      44. All the world's a lolly-shop
      45. It is the last
      46. The white flowers came
      47. The wedding in September
      48. The hour of the parting
      49. The song and the bird
      50. The scent o' the lover
      51. At the end of spring
      52. For a child
      53. The dream is deep
      54. The quarrel with the neighbour
      55. His love was burned away
      56. For a little girl's birthday
      57. When kisses are as strawberries
      58. Schoolgirls hastening
      59. Dolly's offering
      60. To a schoolgirl
      61. 'Tis the white plum tree
      62. The unlovely player
      63. The eleventh moon
      64. The evening is the morning
      65. The orange tree
      66. In the dim counties
      67. Show me the song
      68. The woman of Ireland
      69. Ride him away
      70. The magpie in the moonlight
      71. The birds go by
      72. The sweetening of the year
      73. Out to the green fields
      74. Green lover
      75. Stony town
      76. To an early-flowering almond
      78. Those shaded eyes
      79. The blue wren in the hop-bush
      80. April weather
      81. The Irish welcome
      82. Colour yourself for a man
      83. The hen in the bushes
      84. The moon was seven days down
      85. The flight of the weary
      86. Love in absence
      87. The child being there
      88. He sold himself to the daisies
      89. So sweet a mouth had she
      90. Lament for early buttercups
      91. Half a life back
      92. The lad who started out
      93. To a lodging-house canary
      94. Native companions dancing
      95. Stephen Foster
      96. The stolen lament
      97. The Whistling Jack
      98. The good season
      99. The soldier is home
      100. The poor, poor country
      101. The winter sundown
      102. The bard and the lizard
      103. Song for a honeymoon
      104. The ballad of remembrance
      105. The gentle water bird

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